TTTE MORNING OREGONIAX. SATURDAY, NOVEMBER 4, 1922 mnrn uirnnmn DO! yytuui b TO BE SIMPLIFIED Plan for Orchestra to Play Is Abandoned. MONARCHISTS ARE ANGRY Friends ot Late Empress Augusta Also Opposed to Coming Marriage of ex-Monarch. i roads without taxing property, other than the automobile. "The mileage of work completed . to the close of 1922, under the plan that Mr. Pierce attacks so illogi cally, is of itself a direct answer to his baseless charge. Of grading, 1773 miles; of rock or gravel surfac ing, 1431 miles; of paving, 670 miles. I Of bridges completed, 533. Of grade j crossings eliminated, with their ' threat of peril, 51 by relocation and 32 by overhead bridges or under- crossings. Speaker Declared Ignorant. "He had said, with an absurd lack of knowledge of the facts, that for 50 years the holders of highway bonds would be clipping coupons at the expense of the state. The life of the average bond is 15 years, with a maximum life of 25 years on the coupon-bearing securities. The pretended or actual ignorance displayed by his statement in this particular Is characteristic of his entire attack. "None will deny that the farmer is more benefited by highways than any other citizen. They are his thoroughfares to market and pros perity. Yet by the financial plati of the commission the burden of road building has been borne in only a small degree by the farmer. Being shared by automobile owners, it is clearly apparent that the up keep and construction of highways is largely centered in the cities. Multnomah county alone has one- DOORN, Nov. 3. (By the Associ ated Press.) Painfully impressed with the marked disapproval shown by friends of the late Empress Au gusta and by monarchist circles to ward his coming marriage to the Princess Hermione of Reuss, ex-Em- i third of the motor vehicles of the peror William has decided to elimi- I state. Mr. Pierce alone seems not ROSALIE SUMY TOiWlTl Girl Held by Brute Removed From Farmhouse. STORY OF CAPTURE TOLD Raymond Child, Wilson, Kidnaper of Begins Serving of nate certain features of the festivi ties planned in connection with the wedding here on Sunday. The changes from the original pro gramme have considerably simpli fied it. One of the plans abandoned by the ex-kaiser is that of engag.ng an orchestra to play the wedding music. He has decided to content himself with strains from the family organ. The musical programme will includeMendelssohn's wedding march and the bridal chorus from "Lohen grin." Civil Service to Be Private. No guests will be allowed at the civil ceremony, to be performed in the lodge at the entrance to Doorn house, with the exception of Count Von Moltke, marshal of the ex kaiser's "court," and the official witnesses. The guests will await the return of the bridal couple from the lodge in the main hall of the castle, where Dr. Vogel, ex-court chaplain, will perform the religious ceremony. Directly after this, it is reported, Hermione will ceremonious ly receive the title "queen of 1'rusaia." The apartment on. the ground floor of Doorn house, where the ex-kais-erine died, has not been opened, and Hermione's apartment is on the second floor, separated by a small boudoir from the ex-kaiser's room. Six Witnesses to Attend. There will be six witnesses at "f.he civil marriage. The mayor of Doorn will conduct the proceedings. The ex-kaiser has succeeded in intrenching himself against inquisi tive intruders, curious as to the preparations for the wedding. With ingenuity and thoroughness he has contrived to conceal the retreat of his little "court" from public gaze. Doorn house is unimpressive when compared with the medieval castle at Amerongen nearby, where Wil liam enjoyed the hospitality of Count Bentinck immediately after his ar rival in Holland. Doorn house is best described as a spacious country house of ISth century type. It is a three-story brick building : tests. to understand nor appreciate this significant fact. Farms No Lonsrer Isolated. "The Oregon highways system, as realized by the commission, has re moved from farm life the blight of isolation. It has made the farm an attractive home, no lo'nger distant from market and town. With the development of cheap electric power, coupled with the convenience of the highways, the trend from farm to city will be halted and the agricul tural prosperity which means the general welfare will be immeasur ably advanced. "Mr. Pierce raises loud objection to the salaries paid by the commis sion to highway engineers. He is inconsistent. As a regent of Oregon Agricultural college he approves the far higher salaries paid to faculty members of that worthy institution. He is bargaining for brains and so is the highway commission. High way engineers are men of technical training and actual field experience, readily commanding decent salaries. Despite the allegation that the com mission rewards them too well, en gineers are constantly leaving the employ of the state to accept more lucrative positions elsewhere. Many Cars Are Gifts. . "He has charged the commission with extravagance in the purchase and operation of its necessary trucks and automobiles. Yet he neglects, intentionally or otherwise, to inform the public that $1, 800,000 worth of trucks and automobiles were a gift from the federal government, cost ing the state nothing save the fre' :ht charges. Many of these were allocated to the different counties. Those remaining in the service of the highways have since earned for the state in excess of $500,000. "The briefest of replies must be made to his charge that it was ex pensive and unnecessary to send en gineers to the recent highway tests in California. They were sent, .as engineers were sent from every part of America, to avail themselves of the important revelations of the which might conceivably. i . , It L"' 1 T.ls i-V"s ! through the avoiding of mistakes in about 300 yards south of the high-, Oregon, save hundreds of thousands way between Ltrecht and Arnheim. ! of doiIars to this state. The total amid beautiful surroundings. ThlCost of this trip of whjch he com. estate does not differ much from pWins was $35 ,,USe i m?L We,fth' ,P,Utch, fami' I 'progress Forces Change. rangement of foliage by which it is! ,"As 'V.I8 altera"on f "Uway hidden from view. ' p,ans and the reconstruction of cer- tain units, the tacts are self-ap-EnnrmouM Sums Hrnihmci!. ; parent. When the programme was Gossip is rife throughout the vil- j originated it was for the construc lage concerning the enormous sums! ion of narrow roads. suitable for the the ex-kaiser is said to have spent: light motor traffic then existing in alterations and renovations. The front of the house, that is, the -side facing the highway, is now the rear, and only the top stories are visible from the road, the lower part of the building being hidden by a bank of evergreens. The grounds are sur rounded by a tall meshed fence sur mounted with barbed wire. William has a number of trusty bodyguards who obey his commands with the same alacrity as though 40-Xear Sentence. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) MUSKEGON, Mich., Nov. 3. Pret ty Rpsalie Shanty, the 12-year-old "swimming girl," kidnaped from church and held prisoner in the sand dunes two nights and two dayB by Raymond E. Wilson, was brought back today by her parents from the farm house where she found refuge after escaping from Wilson. Sarah McVeigh, a police woman, accom panied the parents and immediately after the child had been given a superficial examination by physi cians she was removed to a hospital for a surgical operation, necessitated by the brutal mistreatment by Wil son. Physicians fear the child's mind will be permanently affected. ..She was able today to give a fairly coherent account of her terrible ex periences in the jack pines with her captor, but her story would break frequently while she discussed imaginative things she saw as she wandered through the woods, almost perishing from abuse and hunger. Girl Breaks Away. The sordid details of her experi ences at J.he hands of "that old man," as she described Wilson, will not bear publication. For two-nights and two days she was his captive. He is six feet ' tall, weighs 170 pounds, and the little girl was no match for his strength. At S o'clock on the afternoon of the second day, unable any longer to endure the frightful torture, she managed to slip from his grasp and run. Dodg ing around trees, she managed to outrun him and hide in the under brush until he gave up the chase, returned to the "borrowed" automo bile and drove away. Then, all that night, sufferingtne pangs of hunger and the pains of his abuse, she wandered aimlessly through the woods, her childish mind conjuring up all sorts of frightful shapes In the bushes. To ward morning she fell, exhausted, near the lake shore and a farm hand found her there when he went out seeking some stray cattle. Wilson Begins Sentence. There were hints today that two men residing in Dublin, the little town where she was found, might be involved in the case, but their connection, if any, is not made clear. It is intimated, however, that they had advance knowledge of Wilson's intentions to kidnap and outrage the child and by informing the authori ties they might have saved her. Wilson entered Marquette prison today to begin his sentence of 40 years, which probably means life for him. Scores of telegrams were received today by Judge Vanderwerp and other officials, praising him for swift justice meted out to Wilson, but several - persons telegraphed their regret that he had not been turned over to the mob. The countryside around Dublin indulged in a celebration last night as soon as news of Wilson's sentence was received. Notwithstanding the publicity given the Wuson case and the dan- gentina were reported by Commer cial Attache Feeley at Buenos Aires. Planting exceeds last year, he said, and the wheat" acreage is 25 per cent greater than last year, while a large linseed harvest is promised. The prevailirfg prices of the chief agricultural products wheat, corn and linseed however, have been lower than last month. A notable increase in the imports of certain lines of American goods, such as silk, hardware and automo biles, was seen, together with an increasing number of Amrtcan salesmen in Argentina. The whole market of Brazil is in a state of collapse, according to Commercial Attache Schurz at Rio Janeiro. The continued fall of exchange during the past month, he advised, has seriously depressed general imports, E.nd the government, exercising ab solute control over all exchange transactions, has delegated its pow ers to the Banco de Brazil, which now requires large amounts of for eign exchange to cover the gov ernment's debt service. Only the entry into the market of a large amount of coffee bills and freedom for banks in exchange business can correct the difficult situation, he asserted. - The general economic situation in Mexico shows no improvement; in fact, conditions are somewhat worse. Trade Commissioner Bassnell at Mexico City asserted. Credits re main unsatisfactory, collections are becoming n'ore involved and general banking operations are falling off, he reported, although railway trans portation is steadily Improving. RECTO m R FOUND, IS R REPORT picture actor, came here yesterday : to consult physicians at the Mayo ! clinic were denied tonight at the clinic Rumors that the movie star was in town with his wife, current yesterday, and today, could not be confirmed and the couple could not be found at any of the local hotels. Sleuths Said to Have Traced Slayers' Machine. ACTION PROMISED SON MOONSHINER FINED $400 3 IM DIE IN FIRE FIVE OTHERS DYING, 10 JUKED IX FACTORY. IN- 10,000 Persons Watch Fireman Bring Down Three Girls on Scaling Ladder. 'By Chlcaeo Tribune Leased Wire.) NEW YORK, Nov. 3. Three women are known to be dead, five persons are dying nd ten others were injured as a result of a fire in a factory building at 16 East Thir teenth street today. Two who leaped from the upper floors to the street were killed in stantly. One woman was burned to death. The flames spread with almost ex plosive swiftness. , Many thrilling rescues were made, one fireman bringing down three girls on a seal ing ladder, while more than 10,000 persons watched. The fire was discovered in a closet on the second floor, which is occu pied by Henry Schreiber, perfume manufacturer. Thirty girls were trapped on the other floors, and when their efforts to extinguish the flames proved futile they becamo panic-stricken and many leaped from the windows. ihe bodies of the girls were burned beyond recognition, and identification is being made by means of jewelry. The two who leaped to death are believed to be Mrs. Hattie Cufall of Brooklyn1 and Mary Frettli of the Bronx. for the small car. Trucks had not then taken their place on the high ways. But with the arrival of this heavier traffic it was seen that the original plan must be abandoned for the truck made necessary the building of roads much more ex- j gerously high feeling of public pensive, of greater width and i opinion, another man last night at thickness, than previously contem- Utempted to attack Miss Nellie John- plated. "And of the stretch through the Siskiyou mountains, also assailed as ne sou retained nis actual imperial unnecessarily expensive, the corn power, and rigid Prussian discipline ! mission submits that ,the. widening is maintained among the 40 odd , of this highway was made neces servitors, who are ruled with a rod j sary by changed conditions, and of iron by-Count von Moltke. the voices its regret that the contrac marshal of the "court." Absolute tor in living up to his contract lost silence is their rule as far as the j his personal fortune but paid his outer world is concerned, newspaper bills and redeemed his obligation men being their special bete noire. son. 20 years of age. just outside the city, as she was returning from work. After a hard battle the girl fought him off and escaped. Mus kegon is aroused by this attack, following upon the heels of the Rosalie Shanty crime, and diligent search is -being made for the moron. Selected German workmen were used in the alterations on the es tate to avoid gossip through local artisans, and the Doorn tradesmen who deal with the ex-kaiser are close-mouthed, fearing to lose his patronage should tliey drop any in formation. Approach Is Graveled. The approach to Doorn house is a graveled fore-court leading to a semi-circular building which is called a lodge, but which is almost too large and massive to warrant this appellation. This is the outer bulwark of the estate and serves as barracks for the army of re tainers and Dutch rural gendarme guards who turn back everyone not provided with a permit. The gate, heavily studded and set on enormous hinges, hangs in the center of an open structure which would serve for the entrance to a fortress. Through the gate a winding drive leads to the main entrance of the castle and this will be the processional road for the wedding cortege from the lodge, where the civil ceremony will be performed. The religious ceremony has been enlarged by the removal of the par tition walls of two adjoining rooms to accommodate the 50 or 60 guests expected to atnd. Kx-Chaplnin to Officiate. Dr. Vogel will pronounce the nup tial benediction. An altar and lec tern have been moved into the hall from the family chapel, long un used, which stands a little distance from the house. Plants and flowers from the ex-kaiser's hothouses have been placed in the festal hall, mak ing a. pleasing contrast against the floors and walls of white Italian marble. The majority of German guests not belonging to William's imme diate family circle are not expected to arrive until Saturday and will leave on Sunday, the ex-crown 'prince alone staying until Wednes day. Among those expected today is William's sister, ex-Queen Sophia of Greece. It is learned that the wedding breakfast will be prepared by a staff of German cooks and will be served at one lon;r table decorated with maidenhair ferns and red roses. The bridal bouquet, from the castle hothouses, will be t.f mauve orchids and wh'te carnations. William's favorite shade of mauve is also carried out in the bridal cos tume, while he wil, wear the scarlet un'form of a guard's regiment. PIERCE ATTACKS DENIED (Continued From First Page. ) to the state. The continued rise of materials and labor costs follow ing the war brought disaster to the man who made possible the economical construction of this road. State Appreciates Efforts. Personally, I am aware that the citizens of Oregon do not regard the commission and its work in the same light that Mr. Pierce does. During the recent inspection tour of the commission, which was 2500 miles in extent and occupied 21 days, I was more than repaid for my own ' efforts by the entnus-ii-.stic appreciation everywhere en countered. Residents of Oregon know how marked the improve ment of our roads has been under the commission's programme, and I am confident that they are not to be footed by the idle and partisan statements made by Mr. Pierce. "Ours is one of the few highway commissions in the United Stats that is out of politics, that is not a part of the political spoils system. It has never been in politics in any way, nor has the governor ever sug gested who it should employ or dis charge. "There are other allegations made by Mr. Pierce to which the commis sion might effectively reply. It does not feel that the patience of the public should be needlessly tried by a more prolonged discussion of the singular ignorance, or inexcus able malic, betrayed by Mr. Pierce in his published statements against it and its programme." Mr. Hawley to Speak at Salem. SALEM, Or., Nov. 3. (Special.) Representative Hawley will speak at the Monday noon luncheon of the Salem chamber of commerce, it was announced today. GOMDLTIQNS HHT WIDELT SITUATION IN ARGENTINA IS REGARDED AS NOR5IAL. Brazil lias Exchange Crisis and Status of Peruvian Trade Is Unsatisfactory. WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 3. Economic conditions in the im portant Latin-American countries during the past month varied widely, according to reports to the commerce department today from its foreign- agents. In Argentina the situation was regarded as nor mal, in Brazil an exchange crisis was reported, while not much change was noted in Chile, and in Peru conditions were declared to be unsatisfactory. In Mexico con ditions were described as somewhat worse. Rxcellent croo orospects in Ar- Mystery Shronds Activities Prosecutor's Forces in Hall-Mills Case. of SCHOOL TAX IS ASKED The Dalles Voters Called On for $120,000 to Meet Growth. THE DALLES, Or., Nov. 3. (Spe cial.) The Dalles city schools have been growing faster than the 6 per cent limitation with the result that a special election has been called for November 28 In which the vot ters will be asked to pass on the proposition of a special tax. for next year amounting to $120,000. The school board estimated that growth of the city means an ex tensive building programme within the next three years and wants to get the present indebtedness out of the way before assuming the new obligations, it was said. Present costs cannot be cut down without seriously hampering the operation of the schools, it was declared. The district now has a $34,000 note Indebtedness and it will be neces sary to borrow at least $20,000 more before taxes begin coming in, school board members declared. NEW BRUNSWICK. TC. J., Nov. 3. (By the Associated Press.) This was another day of mystery in the Hall-Mills murder case. The following things happened: 1. County Detective David, work ing under Special Deputy Attorney General Mott, predicted that re porters could be sure of action next week. !. Detectives said they had lo cated the automobile in which the siayers are-believed to have ridden to the scene of the murders on tne Phillips farm. 3. The witness heralded as hav ing testimony to support tne eye witness story of the shooting told by Mrs Jane Gibson, farmer and , self-styled eyewitness to the dou- : ble shooting, was identified as Mrs. i A. C. Fraley, a widow living with her daughter in a farmhouse on Lovers' lane, near the scene of the ; murder. It was understood that she had stated she had seen, from the upper stories of her home, figures moving in the field in which the slaying had occurred and bad heard shots, but her home was barred today to reporters and she could j not be interviewed. Sigourney Smith, a gravedigger and a boarder ir. Mrs. Fraley's home, already has been questioned by state troopers. Mr. Mott Keeps Aloof. 4. Mr. Mott failed to appear in New Brunswick, although his as sistants had summoned all the wit nesses for interrogation, with the exception of Mrs. Edward Wheeler Hall, whose husband, rector of St. John the Evangelist church, was found slain with Mrs. Eleanor R. Mills, choir singer. 5. Detective Mason, chief aide to Mr. Mott. later was seen to depart in the direction of Newark, after holding a hasty platform conference with Mrs. Gibson and another wom an, said to have been her mother. The women did not board the train. 6. Mr. Mason, 3een after his ar rival in Newark, denied that he had taken any witnesses to Newark dur ing the day for questioning by Mr. Mott. He said he anticipated no important developments before Mon day. 7. The rumor still prevailed that grand jury action might be -expected Monday and that two warrants al ready had been prepared. Mrs. Hall Pleased. Miss Sally Peters, confidante of Mrs. Hall, told reporters Mrs. Hall was much pleased with the results of the long interviews she had given reporters this week, and that let ters received from various parts of the country indicated a strong re action in favor of the rector's widow. Investigators announced they were receiving scores of freak letters from persons offering to solve the mystery. One offered an algebraic solution. Designating principals as A, B, C, D, etc., and the slayer as X, the writer forwarded six pages of equa tions which left the investigators still in doubt as to the identity of X. Dream solutions are arriving by the dozen. One evangelist submit ted the result of a supposedly divine communication. The letters accused a dozen dif ferent persons of the crime. Complete Ontfit Found in Home of Winford A. Kcmano. Winford A. Kemano, from the attic of whose home at 365 East Seventh stree-t deputy sheriffs re moved two large stills.. 100 gallons I of mash and a small quantity of whisky yesterday, was sentenced by District Judge Bell to pay a fine of $400. There were two copper stills, a. pressure tank, burners and "all the accessory equipment of a going moonshine factory, even including the new process of aging liquor by filtering it through charcoal. Ke mano told the officers he had not sold any of his product, but entered a plea, of guilty when taken before Jodge Bell. He could not raise the $400, and remained in jail through out the day. S. & R. green stamps for cash. Holman Fuel Co.. coal and wood. Broadway 6353: 560-21 Adv S9726 IS CDNTR1BUTED SUPPLEMENTAL REPORT BY REPUBLICANS FILED. About $5000 Is Turned Over by Senatorial Committee; Some Districts Given Aid. WASHINGTON. D. C, Nov. 3. On the eve of the campaign wind-up the republican congressional com mittee showed, in a supp.ementa: report filed today with the clerk of the house, a number of districts in which it had sent money on be half of republican candidates. Ohio Missouri, Michigan Indiana, Mary land, New York and Tennessee were among the states where active work now s under way in the fight to hold seats. Contributions to the committee since its last statement were J9726, of which $5000, or more than one half, was turned over to it by the republican senatorial committee. Among candidates in whose inter est it sent funds were Representa tives French and Smith, both Idaho. $400 each. The flying squadron of Indiana, a prohibition organization filed a supplemental report showing re ceipts of $2172 and disbursements of "$795. Its fund is used largely for expenses of prohibition speakers. Wayne .. Wheeier, as treasurer of the campaign committee of the anti-saloon league, in a supplement al statement showed no additional contributions but expenditures of $461 in Illinois, Maryland, Ohio and Vermont "to aid in the election of representatives in congress opposed to and to defeat candidates favor able to the beer and wine nullifi cation amendment to the national prohibition act." The money was used mainly for printing and cir culation of documents aga'nst beer and wine and lited some candidates heretofore mentioned in tha league reports. Steamer Breaks Gas Main. HOQUIAM. Wash., Nov. 3. (Spe cial.) Cold lunches were the order of the day yesterday in many homes west of the Hoquiam river as the result of the breaking of the gas main across the river by the steamer Hokkal Maru on her way upstream. The big ship got away from the control of her tugs and jammed her nose into the bank at the foot ot Fifth street, breaking the three inch main ot the gas company cross ing at that point. The gas supply was cut off for an hour and a half before repairs could be made. Tha steamer was pulled off undamaged and moved to her mill dock to load OH BAKER BUDGET $216,141 Appropriation of $3000 for County Agent Included. BAKER, Or., Nov. 3. (Special.) The 1923 advisory budget, .com pleted today, by the Baker county budget board, provides $26,000 for next year's expenditures and in ad dition carries a $3000 appropriation for a county farm agent. The only other new item Is $500 for the Louise home in Portland The budget totals $216,141.65, in cluding a $5000 emergency fund. Tht estimated county income Was placed at $40,000, making a total of $176. 141.65 to be raised by taxation if approved. This, compared with the $202,288 levied in 1922, shows a re duction of approximately 12 per cent. EGYPT SENDS STUDENTS Ten to Study U. S.Methods for 2 Years at Government Cost. (By Chicago Tribune Leased Wire.) WASHINGTON, D. C, Nov. 3. Ten Egyptian students, graduates of the engineering and polytechnic schools of Egypt, sent to "America by the khedive's government to learn American manufacturing methods, have arrived in Washington and have been placed by the department of commerce in automobile and other factories, where they will for two years work as actual employes, with the purpose of carrying back to the land of the Pyramids Amer ican technical knowledge and skill. The Egyptian government pays all the expenses of the mission. Report on Wallace Reid Denied. ROCHESTER, Minn., Nov. 5. Reports that Wallace Reid, motion tion. He has said that it could not he done. It has already been done It is a fact that he cannot deny nor dodge He has saif that it would be necessary to tax property to build roads. The commission has built Look for the Mark! The Norwegian "Fisher man Mark" of quality and goodness that is on every bottle of cott's Emulsion assures you heaith-buiiding, vitamine - bearing cod -liver. oil in its purest form, pleasant to take, readily assimilated and transformed into strength. The "Fisherman Mark" should be on every bottle of emulsion you buy. Scott & Bowne, Bloomfictd, N. J. 22-18 OU'LL remember Man Serv. ice It gives you what you want, when you want it and as you want it. WE NEVER CLOSE e; iC! mX selling CORNER. 6T8 and ALDER. STS. E.U1LD1NO EGGERT-YOUNG Ci NOW LOCATED EGGERT BUILDING 127 SIXTH STREET Near The Oregonian TELEPHONE BROADWAY 7121 Taking Orders Now for Engraved Christmas Cards WO n Merchandise tie of cJ Merit Only Men, Something New to See in Our Showing of "Langham" and. 'Stein-Bloch' Clothes Mm Tfr II New Arrivals-New Patterns Finest Wool Fabrics, and Tailoring That Leaves Nothing to Be Desired Comes now the season of extended social activity and a still greater appreciation of the greater importance that's to be attached to the better clothes bearing the "Stein-Bloch" and "Langham" labels. Moderate pricing $44.50 to $54.50. On the Fifth Floor Lip man, Wolfe A Co. r Lipman, Wolfe's Is the Place to Get Those Popular Corduroy Peon Pants in the New Styles $6.50 We've just received our fifth shipment of toreador trousers the increasing de mand for these dashing garments has kept us on the jump. We have a good supply for today's selling but they won't last long at the rate they are going. Men's Clothing Section On the Fifth Floor Lipman, Wolfe & Co. . . - ' It's Lipman, Wolfe's That Has the Complete Line of Boys' "Sampeck" Suits Better Style, Longer Service and Superior Workmanship America's Best Suits for Boys Clothes with the "snap" boys like clothes presentable months after others would have been worn out clothes that fit perfectly always no wonder boys demand "Sampeck" when a new suit is talked of. Priced $14.50 to $24.50. On the Fifth Floor Lipman, Wolfe A Co. Portland's Largest Showing of Boys' Finer Wool Sweaters All the High School Colors Are Included Young fellows who have the open-air fever that always accompanies the arrival of football weather need these dandy sweaters heavy, all-wool sweaters in any combination of school colors one could wish sweaters that snugly keep the body warm, and yet allow the free expression of all the zest this weather calls forth. Priced $5, $6.45 and $7.45. On the Fifth Floor Lipman, Wolfe & Co. 'This Store Uses No Comparative Prices- 5 (0 -They Are Misleading and Often Untrue I" .1